Table of Contents
Introduction & Background
Introduction to the report ______________________________________________ 1
Introduction to the report ______________________________________________ 2
Research Questions & Information from other studies ______________________ 3
Results
Introduction to Results ________________________________________________ 4
The impact of CO2 Emissions __________________________________________ 5
Does income contain a correlation? ______________________________________ 6
How does smoking affect our life expectancy ______________________________ 7
How the leading causes of death relate ___________________________________ 8
How the health care has affected life expectancy ____________________________ 9
Future Studies
Thing’s that could have been improved on _______________________________ 10
Conclusion
A restatement of the work that has been done…show more content… The life expectancy and CO2 emissions share a strong, positive, linear correlation. Through analysis of this graph I can conclude that the two variables have a reverse cause and effect relationship. My reasoning for concluding this is that as life expectancy grows, the CO2 emissions that every person contributes to raises because there is a higher population. The first cluster between 15 and 20 in the chart above is a result of a hidden variable which would be time. The biggest data cluster between the 5 and 10 ton mark for CO2 emissions is due to World War 2. The reason that CO2 emissions per person dropped is because a large portion of Canadians died during this time and this brought the average CO2 emissions for the population down. The lowest outlier is also due to war and was the peak at which the population decreased so the CO2 emissions had gone down with